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Introduction
• Exchange programs allow a university to
trade without imposing significant risks
and to avoid uncertainty
6-3
International Trade and the
World Economy
Trade is the voluntary exchange of goods, services, assets, or money between one person or organization and another.
International trade is trade between residents of two countries.
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Figure 6.1 Growth of World Merchandise
Exports since 1950
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Figure 6.2 Sources of World’s Merchandise
Exports, 2006
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• The first theories of international trade developed with
the rise of the great European nation-states during the
sixteenth century.
• These early theories focused on the individual country in
examining patterns of exports and imports.
• The country-based theories are particularly useful for
describing trade in commodities—standardized,
undifferentiated goods such as oil, sugar, or lumber that
are typically bought on the basis of price rather than
brand name.
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Classical Country-Based Trade Theories
Mercantilism
Absolute Advantage
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Political and economic policy in the
17th and early 18th centuries aimed
at increasing a nation’s wealth and
power by encouraging the export of
goods in return for gold
Classical Trade Theory • Trying to Explain:
– Why countries trade, and
– Why some countries grow faster and
wealthier than others through trade?
© PhotoDisc
6-9
Classical Country-Based
Trade Theories
• Mercantilism
• Absolute Advantage
• Comparative Advantage
• Comparative Advantage with Money
• Relative Factor Endowments
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Mercantilism
• A country’s wealth is measured by its
holdings of gold and silver
• A country’s goal should be to enlarge
holdings of gold and silver by:
– Promoting exports
– Discouraging imports
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Disadvantages of Mercantilism
• Confuses the acquisition of treasure with the acquisition of wealth
• Weakens the country because it robs individuals of the ability to: – Trade freely
– Benefit from voluntary exchanges
• Forces countries to produce products it would otherwise not in order to minimize imports
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Protectionism
• Modern mercantilism (neomercantilists)
– American Federation of Labor -Congress of
Industrial Organizations
– Textile manufacturers
– Steel companies
– Sugar growers
– Peanut farmers
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Absolute Advantage
• Export those goods and services for which
a country is more productive than other
countries
• Import those goods and services for which
other countries are more productive than it
is
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Comparative Advantage
• Produce and export those goods and
services for which it is relatively more
productive than other countries
• Import those goods and services for which
other countries are relatively more
productive than it is
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Differences between Comparative and
Absolute Advantage
• Absolute versus relative productivity
differences
• Comparative advantage incorporates the
concept of opportunity cost
– Value of what is given up to get the
good
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Comparative Advantage
with Money • One is better off specializing in what one
does relatively best
• Produce and export those goods and
services one is relatively best able to
produce
• Buy other goods and services from people
who are better at producing them
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Relative Factor Endowments
• Heckscher-Ohlin Theory
• What determines the products for which a
country will have a comparative advantage?
– Factor endowments vary among countries
– Goods differ according to the types of factors
that are used to produce them
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Heckscher-Ohlin Theory
A country will have a comparative
advantage in producing products that
intensively use resources (factors in
production) it has in abundance.
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6-20
Modern Firm-Based
Trade Theories • Growing importance of MNCs
• Inability of the country-based theories to
explain and predict the existence and
growth of intraindustry trade
• Failure of Leontief and others to
empirically validate country-based
Heckscher-Ohlin theory
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Firm-Based Trade Theories
• Country Similarity Theory
• Product Life-Cycle Theory
• Global Strategic Rivalry Theory
• Porter’s National Competitive Advantage
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Country Similarity Theory
• Explains the phenomenon of intraindustry trade
(as opposed to interindustry trade)
– Trade between two countries of goods
produced by the same industry
• Japan exports Toyotas to Germany
• Germany exports BMWs to Japan
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Product Life-Cycle Theory
• Describes the evolution of marketing strategies
• Stages
– New product
– Maturing product
– Standardized product
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Stages in the Product Life Cycle
New Product Stage
Maturing Product Stage
Standardized Product Stage
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Figure 6.4a The International Product Life
Cycle: Innovating Firm’s Country
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Figure 6.4b The International Product Life
Cycle: Other Industrialized Countries
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Figure 6.4c The International Product Life
Cycle: Less Developed Countries
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Global Strategic Rivalry Theory
• Firms struggle to develop sustainable
competitive advantage
• Advantage provides ability to dominate
global marketplace
• Focus: strategic decisions firms use to
compete internationally
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Global Strategic Rivalry Theory Sustaining
Competitive Advantage
• Owning intellectual property rights
• Investing in research and development
• Achieving economies of scale or scope
• Exploiting the experience curve
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Porter’s Diamond of
National Competitive Advantage
Firm Strategy,
Structure,
and Rivalry
Related and
Supporting
Industries
Factor
Conditions
Demand
Conditions
Figure 6.5
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Theories of International Trade
Figure 6.6 Theories of International Trade
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Types of International
Investments • Does the investor seek an active
management role in the firm or merely a
return from a passive investment?
– Foreign Direct Investment
– Portfolio Investment
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Figure 6.7 Stock of Foreign Direct
Investment, by Recipient
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Table 6.4a Sources of FDI in the U.S.
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Table 6.4b Destinations of FDI
for the U.S.
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International Investment
Theories • Ownership Advantages
• Internalization
• Dunning’s Eclectic Theory
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Ownership Advantages
• A firm owning a valuable asset that
creates a competitive advantage
domestically can use that advantage to
penetrate foreign markets through FDI.
• Why FDI and not other methods?
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Internalization Theory
• FDI is more likely to occur when
transaction costs with a second firm are
high.
• Transaction costs are costs associated
with negotiating, monitoring, and enforcing
a contract.
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Dunning’s Eclectic Theory
• FDI reflects both international business
activity and business activity internal to the
firm.
• Three conditions for FDI:
– Ownership advantage
– Location advantage
– Internalization advantage
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Table 6.5 Factors Affecting
the FDI Decision
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Group assignments
• What are the comparative advantages of
China, India and the four Asian tiger
economies?-class project for quiz 1
• Bread talk case (answer the
questions)makalah hanya menjawab
pertanyaan -2 groups
Skema Makalah
• I. Pendahuluan
• II. Kajian Teori
• 2.1. Teori Trade (Trade Theory)
• 2.1.1. Absolute Advantage
• 2.1.2. Comparative Advantage
• 2.1.3. Comparative Advantage with money
• 2.1.4. Competitive Advantage
• III. Country Analysis
• !V. Analisis Comp Advantage dari masing-masing negara (jawaban dari
pertanyaan)
• V. Kesimpulan
Arial 12, spasi : 1.5 Margin: 3/3/4/4
Cover page, daftar isi, penomoran halaman di kanan bawah, Daftar Pustaka
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